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Featured researches published by Guy Touati.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 1999

Recognition and management of fatty acid oxidation defects: A series of 107 patients

J. M. Saudubray; Delphine Martin; P. de Lonlay; Guy Touati; F. Poggi-Travert; Damien Bonnet; Philippe Jouvet; M. Boutron; Abdelhamid Slama; Christine Vianey-Saban; Jean-Paul Bonnefont; D. Rabier; P. Kamoun; Michèle Brivet

In a personal series of 107 patients, we describe clinical presentations, methods of recognition and therapeutic management of inherited fatty acid oxidation (FAO) defects. As a whole, FAO disorders appear very severe: among the 107 patients, only 57 are still living. Including 47 siblings who died early in infancy, in total 97 patients died, of whom 30% died within the first week of life and 69% before 1 year. Twenty-eight patients presented in the neonatal period with sudden death, heart beat disorders, or neurological distress with various metabolic disturbances. Hepatic presentations were observed in 73% of patients (steatosis, hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, hepatomegaly, Reye syndrome). True hepatic failure was rare (10%); cholestasis was observed in one patient with LCHAD deficiency. Cardiac presentations were observed in 51% of patients: 67% patients presented with cardiomyopathy, mostly hypertrophic, and 47% of patients had heart beat disorders with various conduction abnormalities and arrhythmias responsible for collapse, near-miss and sudden unexpected death. All enzymatic blocks affecting FAO except CPT I and MCAD were found associated with cardiac signs. Muscular signs were observed in 51% of patients (of whom 64% had myalgias or paroxysmal myoglobinuria, and 29% had progressive proximal myopathy). Chronic neurologic presentation was rare, except in LCHAD deficiency (retinitis pigmentosa and peripheral neuropathy). Renal presentation (tubulopathy) and transient renal failure were observed in 27% of patients. The diagnosis of FAO disorders is generally based on the plasma acylcarnitine profile determined by FAB-MS/MS from simple blood spots collected on a Guthrie card. Urinary organic acid profile and total and free plasma carnitine can also be very helpful, mostly in acute attacks. If there is no significant disturbance between attacks, the diagnosis is based upon a long-chain fatty acid loading test, fasting test, and in vitro studies of fatty acid oxidation on fresh lymphocytes or cultured fibroblasts. Treatment includes avoiding fasting or catabolism, suppressing lipolysis, and carnitine supplementation. The long-term dietary therapy aims to prevent periods of fasting and restrict long-chain fatty acid intake with supplementation of medium-chain triglycerides. Despite these therapeutic measures, the long-term prognosis remains uncertain.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1999

Clinical features of 52 neonates with hyperinsulinism.

P de Lonlay-Debeney; F. Poggi-Travert; Jean-Christophe Fournet; Christine Sempoux; C D Vici; Francis Brunelle; Guy Touati; Jacques Rahier; Claudine Junien; Claire Nihoul-Fékété; J.-J. Robert; Jean-Marie Saudubray

BACKGROUND Neonatal hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia is often resistant to medical therapy and is often treated with near-total pancreatectomy. However, the pancreatic lesions may be focal and treatable by partial pancreatic resection. METHODS We studied 52 neonates with hyperinsulinism who were treated surgically. The type and location of the pancreatic lesions were determined by preoperative pancreatic catheterization and intraoperative histologic studies. Partial pancreatectomy was performed in infants with focal lesions, and near-total pancreatectomy was performed in those with diffuse lesions. The postoperative outcome was determined by measurements of plasma glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin and by oral glucose-tolerance tests. RESULTS Thirty neonates had diffuse beta-cell hyperfunction, and 22 had focal adenomatous islet-cell hyperplasia. Among the latter, the lesions were in the head of the pancreas in nine, the isthmus in three, the body in eight, and the tail in two. The clinical manifestations were similar in both groups. The infants with focal lesions had no symptoms of hypoglycemia and had normal preprandial and postprandial plasma glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin values and normal results on oral glucose-tolerance tests after partial pancreatectomy (performed in 19 of 22 neonates). By contrast, after near-total pancreatectomy, 13 of the patients with diffuse lesions had persistent hypoglycemia, type 1 diabetes mellitus developed in 8, and hyperglycemia developed in another 7; overall, only 2 patients with diffuse lesions had normal plasma glucose concentrations in the first year after surgery. CONCLUSIONS Among neonates with hyperinsulinism, about half may have focal islet-cell hyperplasia that can be treated with partial pancreatectomy. These neonates can be identified through pancreatic catheterization and intraoperative histologic studies.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2005

Methylmalonic and propionic acidaemias: Management and outcome

H. Ogier de Baulny; Jean-François Benoist; O. Rigal; Guy Touati; D. Rabier; J. M. Saudubray

SummaryOrganic acidurias comprise many various disorders. Methylmalonic aciduria (MMA) and propionic aciduria (PA) are the most frequent diseases and the two organic acidurias for which we have better knowledge of the long-term outcome.Comparing the outcome of patients born before and after 1990, it appears that better neonatal and long-term management have improved the survival rate. Less than 20% of the patients died in either the neonatal period or before the age of 10 years. However, most surviving patients showed poor nutritional status with growth retardation and about 40% present some kind of visceral or neurological impairment. The developmental outcome may have improved in MMA patients, with IQ higher than 75 in about 40% patients aged more than 4 years. Conversely, poor intellectual development is the rule in PA patterns, with 60% having an IQ less than 75 and requiring special education. Successful liver and/or renal transplantations, in a few patients, have resulted in better quality of life but have not necessarily prevented neurological and various visceral complications. These results emphasize the need for permanent metabolic follow-up whatever the therapeutic strategy.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 2002

Heterogeneity of persistent hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia. A series of 175 cases.

Pascale de Lonlay; Jean-Christophe Fournet; Guy Touati; Marie-Sylvie Groos; Delphine Martin; C. Sevin; Véronique Delagne; Christine Mayaud; Valerie Chigot; Christine Sempoux; Marie-Claire Brusset; Kathleen Laborde; Christine Bellané-Chantelot; Anne Vassault; Jacques Rahier; Claudine Junien; Francis Brunelle; Claire Nihoul-Fékété; Jean-Marie Saudubray; Jean-Jacques Robert

Abstract. Hyperinsulinism is a heterogeneous disorder characterised by severe hypoglycaemia due to an inappropriate oversecretion of insulin. In a personal series of 175 patients investigated for hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia over the last 20 years, we review clinical presentations, molecular studies and therapeutic management of hyperinsulinism. There were 98 neonatal-onset patients, including 86 permanent hyperinsulinism and 12 transient forms, 68 with infancy-onset and nine with childhood-onset. Hyperammonaemia was found in 12 out of 69 patients tested, 4 neonates and 8 infants. Neonates were clinically more severely affected than infants. Diagnosis of infancy-onset hyperinsulinism was often delayed because of less profound hypoglycaemia and better tolerance to hypoglycaemia. Neonates required higher rates of iv glucose than infants to maintain normal plasma glucose levels (16 mg/kg per min versus 12 mg/kg per min). Only 16% of neonates were diazoxide-sensitive compared to 66% of the infants. Neonates with hyperammonaemia or transient hyperinsulinism were diazoxide-sensitive. Most neonates were pancreatectomised whereas 65% of the infants were treated medically. Among surgically-treated patients, 47% had a focal adenomatous hyperplasia (31 neonates and 13 infants) and 53% a diffuse form of hyperinsulinism (39 neonates and 11 infants). Diazoxide-responsiveness in the focal and diffuse forms did not differ in both neonates and infants; it depended only upon the age of onset of hypoglycaemia. One or two mutations, SUR1 or KIR6.2, were found in 41 of 73 neonates who were investigated and in 13/38 infants using polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformational polymorphism analysis of both genes. Almost all patients with SUR1 (38/41) or KIR6.2 (5/7) mutations were resistant to diazoxide. Ten patients with hyperinsulinism-hyperammonaemia syndrome had a mutation in the glutamate dehydrogenase gene (three neonates and seven infants) after reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and sequence analysis of cDNA. No mutation was found by polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformational polymorphism in the glucokinase gene. Eight of nine patients with childhood onset hyperinsulinism were treated surgically and histological examination confirmed an adenoma in each case. Conclusion: the clinical severity of hyperinsulinism varies mainly with age at onset of hypoglycaemia. The heterogeneity of hyperinsulinism has major consequences in terms of therapeutic outcome and genetic counselling.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2008

NTBC treatment in tyrosinaemia type I: Long-term outcome in French patients

A. Masurel-Paulet; J. Poggi-Bach; M.-O. Rolland; O. Bernard; Nathalie Guffon; Dries Dobbelaere; Jacques Sarles; H. Ogier de Baulny; Guy Touati

SummaryWe describe a retrospective study of long-term outcome of 46 patients treated and regularly followed in France with 2-(2-nitro-4-trifluoromethylbenzoyl)-1, 3-cyclohexanedione (NTBC) for tyrosinaemia type I. Most had initial good response with normalization of liver function and metabolic parameters. Only one infant had no response to treatment and required liver transplantation. Among the 45 long-term treated patients, three underwent secondary liver transplantation: one for cirrhosis and two because of hepatocellular carcinoma. One of the latter died of transplantation complications, so that the overall survival rate was 97.5%. However, 17 of 45 showed persistent abnormal liver imaging (heterogeneous liver) and 6 had cirrhosis. Furthermore, 15 had persistently elevated levels of alpha-fetoprotein, highlighting the question of the persistent risk of carcinoma. Quality of life was usually good but compliance problems were frequent, mainly regarding the low phenylalanine–tyrosine diet. Few adverse effects were observed. A main concern was the high frequency of cognitive impairment causing schooling problems, which may be related to persistent chronic hypertyrosinaemia. In conclusion, this series confirms that NTBC treatment has clearly improved the vital prognosis and quality of life of tyrosinaemia type I patients but that many late complications persist. Long-term studies are necessary to determine whether this drug may prevent or only delay liver complications, andto survey the possible risks of the drug. A more restricted diet could be necessary to prevent the neurological impact of the disease.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2005

Urea cycle defects: management and outcome.

Marie-Cécile Nassogne; B. Héron; Guy Touati; D. Rabier; J. M. Saudubray

SummaryThis paper reviews the clinical presentation of 217 patients with urea cycle defects, including 121 patients with neonatal-onset forms and 96 patients with late-onset forms. Long-term outcome of these patients is also reported with the severity of the neonatal forms of these disorders, mostly for ornithine carbamoyltransferase-deficient males. Patients with late-onset forms may present at any age and carry a 28% mortality rate and a subsequent risk of subsequent disabilities.


Pediatric Radiology | 1995

Hyperinsulinism in children: diagnostic value of pancreatic venous sampling correlated with clinical, pathological and surgical outcome in 25 cases.

J Dubois; Francis Brunelle; Guy Touati; G Sebag; C Nuttin; T Thach; C Nikoul-Fekete; Jacques Rahier; J. M. Saudubray

Neonatal hypoglycemia represents an emergency of heterogenous etiology. The occurrence of persistent hypoglycemia caused by hyperinsulinism has not been well established. Some authors claim that it may be more common than previously suggested. The diagnostic goal is to distinguish hyperinsulinemia from other causes of hypoglycemia because management strategies differ. The diagnosis of persistent hypoglycemia attributable to hyperinsulinism is made when insulin secretion is excessive or inappropriate (>10 μIU/ml). Medical management includes frequent feeding, high hydrocarbon intake, glucagon, diazoxide, somatostatin or steroid treatment. In case of resistance to medical intervention, surgery consisting of subtotal pancreatectomy is performed to avoid neurological sequelae. However, pediatric organic hypoglycemia secondary to hyperinsulinism can be caused by either diffuse or focal pancreatic lesions. Differentiation between these two types of lesion is necessary since partail pancreatectomy can prevent diabetes. In this prospective study, pancreatic venous sampling (PVS) was evaluated for the preoperative localization of lesions in 25 children with hyperinsulinism and correlated with surgical, pathological and clinical outcome. PVS is the most accurate preoperative technique for localizing focal lesions in children. Besides being safe and effective, it has the great advantage of detecting focal secretion, thus reducing the need for extensive surgery.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2010

Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency: four neurological phenotypes with differing pathogenesis.

Christine Barnerias; Jean-Marie Saudubray; Guy Touati; Pascale de Lonlay; Olivier Dulac; Gérard Ponsot; Cécile Marsac; Michèle Brivet; Isabelle Desguerre

Aim  To describe the phenotype and genotype of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHc) deficiency.


Pediatric Research | 2009

Multiple OXPHOS Deficiency in the Liver, Kidney, Heart, and Skeletal Muscle of Patients With Methylmalonic Aciduria and Propionic Aciduria

Vassili Valayannopoulos; Jean-François Benoist; Frédéric Batteux; Florence Lacaille; Laurence Hubert; Dominique Chretien; Bernadette Chadefeaux-Vekemans; Patrick Niaudet; Guy Touati; Arnold Munnich; Pascale de Lonlay

We investigated respiratory chain (RC), tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) enzyme activities, and oxidative stress in the tissues of six patients with organic aciduria (OA) presenting various severe complications to further document the role of mitochondrial OXPHOS dysfunction in the development of complications. Two children with propionic acidemia (PA), presenting a severe cardiomyopathy, and four with methylmalonic aciduria (MMA), who developed a neurologic disease (3/4) and renal failure (2/4), were followed. We measured RC and TCA cycle enzyme activity in patient tissues and assessed oxidative metabolism in fibroblasts in vitro. Various RC deficiencies were found in tissues of patients with PA and MMA. TCA cycle enzyme activities were normal when investigated and reactive oxygen species were decreased as well as detoxifying systems activities in the two patients tested. In conclusion, mitochondrial dysfunction was found in all investigated tissues of six patients with organic acidemia presenting with severe complications. Reactive oxygen species production and detoxification were decreased in fibroblast primary cultures. Our results bring further support for a role of secondary respiratory deficiency in the development of late multiorgan complications of these diseases.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 1999

Liver transplantation in urea cycle disorders

J. M. Saudubray; Guy Touati; Pascale DeLonlay; Philippe Jouvet; C. Narcy; J. Laurent; D. Rabier; P. Kamoun; Dominique Jan; Yann Revillon

Abstract We report here our experience in the long-term management of 28 patients with citrullinaemia, 13 patients with carbamoyl phosphate synthase deficiency and 15 patients with argininosuccinic aciduria. In addition, we report a national French survey of 119 patients with ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency enzymatically characterized in our laboratory. We also include in this report four personal patients (two with OTC and two with citrullinaemia) who were liver transplanted, and one OTC patient from the National French survey. Although this retrospective series is not really representative of the modern treatment combining low protein diet and arginine, sodium benzoate and sodium phenylbutyrate, it is obvious that the long-term outcome of all urea cycle disorders remains very guarded. We highlight the severity of the neonatal forms of such disorders, and mostly for OTC-deficient males. According to this evidence, our policy is not to treat such severely affected patients in the neonatal period who die anyway spontaneously within 2 to 3 days. At the present time, we only have three patients with neonatal citrullinaemia, aged 1, 6 and 10 years respectively, who are still doing well. One of them has been successfully liver transplanted at 5 years. Another transplanted patient died in the post-surgical phase. We emphasize the unexpected severity of argininosuccinic aciduria in which there is no one patient doing well. This is a rather surprising finding as this disorder is easy to manage and rarely presents with recurrent attacks of hyperammonaemia when it is treated by arginine supplementation. This consideration would suggest to extend the indication of orthotopic liver transplantation in this disorder. Finally, the most difficult indication is in the late onset symptomatic female OTC group. In this last group, despite a significant residual activity due to heterozygote status, even with a variable lyonisation, only seven girls are still mentally and neurologically normal. Interestingly, three of these seven were liver-transplanted before the constitution of irreversible neurological damage. These three girls and their family declare their well-being, their feeling to be cured and enjoy their normal life.

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J. M. Saudubray

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Pascale de Lonlay

Paris Descartes University

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D. Rabier

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Francis Brunelle

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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P. de Lonlay

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Claire Nihoul-Fékété

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Jean-Marie Saudubray

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Michèle Brivet

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Vassili Valayannopoulos

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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